Next to Turalyon he is one of the people who defined what it was to be a Paladin and a Knight of the Silver Hand.
I feel that as of late Paladins have moved further and further away from the concept of being a Warrior using the Holy Light who embodies the Church and upholds morals and rules of his order to what is just a very generic Warrior who uses the Light.
This problem has been exacerbated by the apparent neutrality of the Order under Tirion.

Alliance Paladins need to be proper Paladins again. Uther exemplified this sense of being a part of an elite Order of the Church.

Arthas. Either redeemed or still evil, but preferably redeemed. He is what Warcraft made awesome, and people were badly looking forward to see him during vanilla and TBC. He deserves a second change, it was not his fault that he got corrupted and turned over to the Scourge. His own friends abandoned him, he was about to lose in Northrend if he hadn't taken Frostmourne. If only Uther and Jaina where there to help Arthas and Muradin, he never had to pick up Frostmourne to win. Uther could've easily prevented Arthas from picking up that blade.

Arthas. Either redeemed or still evil, but preferably redeemed. He is what Warcraft made awesome, and people were badly looking forward to see him during vanilla and TBC. He deserves a second change, it was not his fault that he got corrupted and turned over to the Scourge. His own friends abandoned him, he was about to lose in Northrend if he hadn't taken Frostmourne. If only Uther and Jaina where there to help Arthas and Muradin, he never had to pick up Frostmourne to win. Uther could've easily prevented Arthas from picking up that blade.

Bring back this Arthas:

That whiney bitch?

I was glad to kill him in Wrath. Not because he was the evil lich king, but because I finally got to kill that annoying princeling.

They ask me why I'm bringin' - A baby into battle - That's really irresponsible - And getting them rattled
I say "give me a break - Get off of my back damn, it" - I didn't learn parenting - My daddy was a planet

Broxigar The Red.
During it's mourning in nagrad, Varok Saurfang was granted a vision by the orcs spirit, it's son reveal him that uncle Brox isn't dead but Sargeras enraged by it's action decide not to kill him but trapped him in an space-time anomaly in wich he is still fighting the demons over and over, he need to bring his brother back because the streght of the Red is need in time comes.
Varok decided to follow the vision and contacted the champions that helped him in Icc and send us a letter, it start a long quest to meet the spirit of krasus, nezdormu, and thula and ended in the cavern of time where we infiltrated the anomaly and help Brox coming back with us. The scenario/istance will introduce us to the demons home world and give us the first real glimpse of sargeras.
The Saurfang brother later reappear during the siege of orgrimmar, in wich they will help the horde and alliance to dispose Garrosh.

I have always had a feeling he will be back, as an earthen. His current stone/crystal form is like a cocoon for a caterpillar. From "Charge of the Aspects" short story:

"Beneath the Eastern Kingdoms, a presence stirred in the mountains of Khaz Modan. The spirit there was strong, but it was not an elemental. It was, strangely, like Thrall: a mortal who had transcended the bounds of flesh. The unknown being patrolled the ancient earth of the region as if it was keeping a silent vigil over the land. It spoke in a dwarven accent that echoed across Azeroth."

If that is not a hint of him still being alive, I don't know what is. Also the earthquakes in IF stopped after Magni did the ritual and transformed. I don't think that's a coincidence.

Last edited by Duncanîdaho; 2012-11-25 at 11:26 AM.

The generalist looks outward; he looks for living principles, knowing full well that such principles change, that they develop. It is to the characteristics of change itself that the mentat-generalist must look. There can be no permanent catalogue of such change, no handbook or manual. You must look at it with as few preconceptions as possible, asking yourself, "Now what is this thing doing?"-Children of Dune

My dream ending to ICC was that Arthas was suddenly, magically redeemed and all brofisting and hugging Muradin and Varian and Jaina panting over him, and then Sylvanas says "yoo hoo!" from the back of the room and puts an arrow in his throat.

Honestly, I get the appeal of a redemption story, but one of the only things that differentiates Arthas as a villain is how his fall was so complete, how he was evil pretty much all the way to the finish. His "lion before lambs" remark was just a comment on the irony of his demise by the weapons he forged ("they cannot fear", realizing that's, uh, his fault). Otherwise, the "Anakin, er, Arthas" joke really would apply.